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  • Colombia vs. Venezuela: Big Oil Turns Up Heat in Border Region

    New California Media, CA
    April 22 2005


    Colombia vs. Venezuela: Big Oil Turns Up Heat in Border Region

    Pacific News Service, News Analysis,
    Bill Weinberg, Apr 22, 2005

    Editor's Note: Longtime U.S. involvement in Colombia may be
    transforming and expanding from a "war on drugs" into a Washington-led,
    oil-company fueled destabilization campaign against Venezuelan
    President Hugo Chavez.

    "Oilmen are like cats; you can never tell from the sound of them
    whether they are fighting or making love," said the famous Armenian
    entrepreneur Calouste Gulbenkian, as oil companies and Western
    governments at a post-World War I summit in Ostend, Belgium, carved
    up oil rights in Iraq and the Persian Gulf.

    Now, even as world attention is riveted on Iraq, military and oil
    company agendas seem to be converging in South America's Orinoco
    Basin, which holds the greatest proven reserves outside the Persian
    Gulf. The region is split by the border between Colombia, Washington's
    closest South American ally, and Venezuela, ruled by a left-populist
    government sharply at odds with the White House.

    Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez would do well to heed Gulbenkian's
    warning. Chavez has just entered into an agreement with ChevronTexaco
    for a natural gas project that will span the Colombian border.

    The Colombian oil heartland of Arauca is one the country's most
    violent regions. It lies just across the Rio Arauca from Venezuela's
    own Orinoco Basin oil heartland.

    Arauca's main oil field is Caño-Limon, run by California-based
    Occidental Petroleum. Many of the 800 U.S. military advisers in
    Colombia are assigned to Arauca, where they oversee a new Colombian
    anti-guerilla army unit especially created to police Caño-Limon. This
    project, for which Occidental lobbied heavily, markedly departs from
    the U.S. policy of only assisting "narcotics enforcement" in Colombia.

    Some fear the oil field could become a base for aggression against
    Venezuela. Oscar Cañas, adviser to Colombia's Central Workers Union,
    told Venezuelan journalist Alfredo Carquez, "They are transforming
    the Caño-Limon facilities into a small military fort." Claiming U.S.
    advisers and surveillance planes are now based there, Cañas notes
    Caño-Limon's proximity to the border and reports of Colombian
    paramilitary attacks on the Venezuelan side. "Who is to guarantee
    that all this is not being used against Venezuela?" he asks.

    Colombia is the third largest recipient of U.S. military aid, after
    Israel and Egypt, and U.S. training of Colombian military personnel
    is rapidly escalating. Meanwhile, Washington is launching a major
    propaganda push against Venezuela.

    A March statement from the Jewish Institute for National Security
    Affairs (JINSA), "South America -- the Next Swamp?" warns that even as
    the United States is "draining the swamp" in Afghanistan, "ideological
    killers are regrouping with the aid of leftist governments and drug
    lords" in the western hemisphere. The principal "leftist government"
    in question is that of Chavez.

    JINSA, a top advocate of the Iraq adventure, cites a London Times
    report (actually based on Colombian government allegations) that mortar
    experts from the Irish Republican Army have set up a training camp for
    Colombian guerillas on Venezuelan territory in the Sierra de Perija,
    a mountain chain that forms the border north of Arauca.

    Another salvo comes from Otto Reich, who was Bush's assistant secretary
    of state for hemispheric affairs, a former ambassador to Venezuela
    and a key figure in the Reagan-era covert destabilization campaign
    against Nicaragua. Reich, in the April 11 National Review, writes:
    "The first task of the U.S., and whatever coalition of the willing
    it can muster in the region, is to confront the dangerous alliance
    posed by Cuba and Venezuela."

    Chavez is inviting new multinational investment for the oil zone. In
    August 2001, Venezuela, Colombia and Texaco agreed to sponsor a
    study on a new pipeline linking natural gas fields in La Guajira,
    on Colombia's Caribbean coast, to Maracaibo, Venezuela's main export
    terminal.

    In May 2003, Venezuela announced new oil finds of up to 2.4 billion
    barrels in the Orinoco. Texaco (which merged with Chevron in 2001)
    proposed another pipeline to pump the crude to the coast. On April 1,
    2005, ChevronTexaco announced a multibillion-dollar investment in
    the new oil field.

    But oil companies have a sweeter deal in Colombia, where Uribe is
    moving to free the industry from public oversight. Chavez, in contrast,
    has boosted royalties companies must pay to fund his ambitious social
    programs.

    La Guajira is another of Colombia's most violent regions, with a string
    of assassinations of indigenous leaders, presumably by paramilitary
    forces, already reported this year. The new cross-border pipeline
    may bring human rights abuses to Venezuela as well as gas.

    This pipeline would cross the Sierra de Perija, where Uribe and
    JINSA now claim Colombian guerillas are based. On April 4, hundreds
    of indigenous peoples' representatives from the Venezuelan side of
    the mountains marched in Caracas, demanding a halt to coal mining on
    their traditional lands by such companies as ChevronTexaco and Shell.
    The new pipeline would add to the military and ecological pressures
    they face.

    Chavez is in a difficult position. He needs oil and gas revenues
    to fund the populist programs that guarantee his popularity. But
    cooperating with the multinational agenda in the border zone may
    cost him support among indigenous peoples. And, some critics warn,
    he may be welcoming the very oil companies that are complicit in the
    destabilization drive against him.

    PNS contributor Bill Weinberg is editor of World War 4 Report. He is
    working on a book about Colombia for Verso Books.

    http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=141c7d84bf2dc0a00a9af 42fa9253d40

    --Boundary_(ID_QhXs2sp4OpqAqLKPwoE1Iw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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